Adrian looked at me as if I had betrayed some sacred vow. For the first time, I saw the truth clearly: he had never wanted a wife. He wanted access while wearing a wedding ring. I pushed the pen back across the table. “I’m filing for divorce,” I said. His mouth opened, but there was no performance left that could save him. The end was not dramatic in the way I once imagined endings would be. Adrian did not chase me through airports or shout beneath windows or break down in a final confession. He hired lawyers, denied everything, and tried to reposition himself as a misunderstood husband caring for a stressed pregnant wife. But the records were too solid, the timelines too consistent, the financial intent too obvious. The court froze the trust changes he had been pushing. My separate assets stayed separate. His previous alias became impossible to explain away.
I moved into Claire’s guest room for the last stretch of my pregnancy. It was cramped, loud, and full of things that had nothing to do with the carefully curated life Adrian had built around me. I loved it almost immediately. Claire made burnt toast every morning. Dr. Shah checked on me more often than she had to. Rebecca sent a short message once asking, How are you holding up?
Three months later, my daughter arrived just before dawn with a furious cry and one tiny, curved little finger on her left hand. When the nurse placed her on my chest, I thought about that first ultrasound and the terror that had followed it. Then I looked around the room. Claire was crying openly. Dr. Shah was smiling from the doorway. Morning light was beginning to thin the dark outside the windows. My marriage had ended. My illusion had ended. My fear had not vanished entirely, but it no longer owned the room. I kissed my daughter’s forehead and understood, at last, that the doctor had saved mine and my daughter’s lives.